10 days or they have to notifiy you in writing that they have not acquired financing.
Yes. The dealer will require proof of insurance prior to letting you take it home. Especially if there is a loan on the vehicle.
You pay taxes to your home state regardless of where you buy the vehicle. A dealer can handle that for you, or you go to the courthouse.
Most dealers have you sign a "spot delivery agreement" (usually within the contract) that states if they cannot get the amount financed from the bank for any reason then you are obligated to pay the amount in full or return the vehicle.
if the mobile has not been paid for (financed) you don't own it. Therefore you cannot move it.
If the question is "who is a lien holder with a financed auto" then the answer is usually: the party who loaned the debtor the money, that is, the bank or lender. For example, if you financed a Hootieville ZX through Holeinwall Bank, then the good people at Holeinwall are the lien holders on your financed vehicle. They have the right, where allowed by law, to sell their interest in your contract to another lender or interested third party, much the way mortgage companies sell home loans like they were hot cakes on a cold winter morning. In short, the lien holder is the person who owns control of the loan (and actually the vehicle) until you pay it off or it gets repo'd and sold.
The key remote for a 2002 745i requires a computer at the dealer to program it. The vehicle owner can not do this at home.
Yes, In some cases. If you are only capable of being financed by a sub-prime or secondary lender, there is a fee or comparatively a closing cost to secure the funds necessary to finance that loan. Unfortunately you may have not to many options as far as the vehicle on the lot you get to take home. The vehicle will have to be able to absorb the cost to finance as well as fall in the criteria, age, mileage and price in which the lender will be willing to finance. this is not an easy feat and can be discouraging. The dealer will not tell you there is a cost associated with this purchase because of the truth in lending laws. Good luck
I sold my home with contract for deed tenant not making any payment who i can get back my home who i can evict him from my home
The home owner actually "finances" or accepts payments fom a private individual, in a seller financed mortgage deal. Many homeowners are reluctant to do this for many valid reasons.
If you have not signed a purchase agreement, yes. If you have signed, ask the dealer if you can back out. If the car has already been put in your name or you have driven it home, it is yours.
IF the home is financed, the lender will require fire and hazard insurance. The policy will at a minimum cover the lender's cost.
If you are buying through a dealer, they have all the necessary paperwork and regulatory knowledge to sell vehicles to out-of-state buyers. They should handle the whole transaction. If you are not buying from a dealer, just make sure that the signed title and bill of sale you get from the owner is filled in properly, and then present the documents to the FL DMV when you get the vehicle back to your home state.